Information about Tort Law
| Tort law |
|---|
| Part of the common law series |
| Negligence |
| Duty of care · Standard of care |
| Proximate cause · Res ipsa loquitur |
| Calculus of negligence · Eggshell skull |
| Negligent emotional distress |
| Rescue doctrine · Duty to rescue |
| Statutory Torts |
| Product liability · Ultrahazardous activity |
| Trespassers · Licensees · Invitees |
| Attractive nuisance |
| Nuisance |
| Public nuisance · Rylands v. Fletcher |
| Property torts |
| Trespass · Conversion |
| Detinue · Replevin · Trover |
| Intentional torts |
| Assault · Battery · False imprisonment |
| Intentional emotional distress |
| Consent · Necessity · Self defense |
| Dignitary torts |
| Slander and libel · Invasion of privacy |
| Breach of confidence · Abuse of process |
| Malicious prosecution |
| Economic torts |
| Fraud · Tortious interference |
| Conspiracy · Restraint of trade |
| Liability, Defenses, Remedies |
| Vicarious liability |
| Volenti non fit injuria · Contribution |
| Ex turpi causa non oritur actio |
| Damages · Injunction |
| Common law |
| Contract law · Property law |
| Wills and trusts |
| Criminal law · Evidence |
- Not to be confused with torte, a frosted cake.
Tort is a legal term in common law jurisdictions that means a civil wrong, and can be a criminal wrong, that is recognized by law as grounds for a lawsuit. Its equivalent in civil law jurisdictions is delict.[1] It is part of the law of obligations but unlike voluntarily assumed obligations on the parties created through a contract, the duties imposed under tort law are mandatory for all citizens in that jurisdiction. To behave 'tortiously' is to harm another's body, property, or legal rights, or to breach a duty owed under statutory law. One who commits a tortious act is called a "tortfeasor".
Categories of torts
The dominant action in tort is negligence, which is used to protect people's bodies and property, including non tangible economic interests. There are certain torts that specially protect land, such as nuisance, which is strict liability for neighbors who interfere with another's enjoyment of their property. Trespass allows owners to sue for intentional incursions by people on their land. There is a tort for false imprisonment, and a tort for defamation, where someone makes an unsupportable allegation represented to be factual which damages the reputation of another. There are statutory, creating product liability and sanctions against anti-competitive companies. The foundation of labor law in the modern welfare state also begins with tort, as a means to mitigate conflicting relations between unions and employers. And now the scope of tort law's application spreads every day. As Lord MacMillan said, in tort's most famous case, "the categories of negligence are never closed".[2]Negligence
- A duty of care
- Breach of that duty
- Breach causing harm in fact
- Breach being a proximate or not too remote a cause, in law
Statutory torts
Another example is the Occupiers' Liability Acts[4] in the UK whereby a person, such as a shopowner, who invites others onto land, or has trespassers, owes a minimum duty of care for people's safety. One early case was Cooke v Midland Great Western Railway of Ireland,[5] where Lord MacNaughton felt that children who were hurt whilst looking for berries on a building site, should have some compensation for their unfortunate curiosity. Statutory torts also spread across workplace health and safety laws and health and safety in food produce.
The concept of statutory torts is not held throughout all common-law countries, however. Courts in both the United States and Canada have rejected the concept that a statutory duty can be the basis of a private cause of action, absent a specific provision in statute authorizing such a cause of action.
Nuisance
A subset of nuisance is known as the rule in Rylands v. Fletcher[7] where a dam burst into a coal mine shaft. So a dangerous escape of some hazard, including water, fire, or animals means strict liability in nuisance. This is subject only to a remoteness cap, familiar from negligence when the event is unusual and unpredictable. This was the case where chemicals from a factory seeped through a floor into the water table, contaminating East Anglia's reservoirs.[8]
Defamation
The "McLibel" two were involved in the longest running case in UK history for publishing a pamphlet criticizing McDonald's restaurants
Intentional torts
Economic torts
Two cases demonstrated economic tort's affinity to competition and labor law. In Mogul Steamship Co. Ltd.[10] the plaintiff argued he had been driven from the Chinese tea market by competitors at a 'shipping conference' that had acted together to underprice his company. But this cartel was ruled lawful and "nothing more [than] a war of competition waged in the interest of their own trade."[11] Nowadays, this would be considered a criminal cartel. In labor law the most notable case is Taff Vale Railway v. Amalgamated Society of Railway Servants.[12] The House of Lords thought that unions should be liable in tort for helping workers to go on strike for better pay and conditions. But it riled workers so much that it led to the creation of the British Labour Party and the Trade Disputes Act 1906 Further torts used against unions include conspiracy,[13] interference with a commercial contract[14] or intimidation.[15]
Through a recent development in common law, beginning with Hedley Byrne v Heller[16] in 1964, and further through the Misrepresentations Act 1967, a victim of the tort[17] of misrepresentation will be compensated for purely economic loss due to the misconception of the terms of the contract.
Competition law
Liability, defenses, and remedies
Vicarious liability
Defenses
Finding a successful defense absolves the defendant from full or partial liability for damages, which makes them valuable commodities in the court. There are three main defences to tortious liability.Volenti non fit injuria
Contributory negligence
This doctrine has been widely criticized as draconian, in that a plaintiff whose fault was comparatively minor might recover nothing from a more egregiously irresponsible defendant. In all but four US states, it has been replaced judicially or legislatively by the doctrine of comparative negligence. Comparative negligence has also been criticized, since it would allow a plaintiff who is recklessly 95% negligent to recover 5% of the damages from the defendant, and often more when a jury is feeling sympathetic. Economists have further criticized comparative negligence, since under the Learned Hand Test it will not yield optimal precaution levels.
Illegality
Ex turpi causa non oritur actio is the illegality defence, the Latin for "no right of action arises from a despicable cause". If the claimant is involved in wrongdoing at the time the alleged negligence occurred, this may extinguish or reduce the defendant's liability. Thus, if a burglar is verbally challenged by the property owner and sustains injury when jumping from a second story window to escape apprehension, there is no cause of action against the property owner even though that injury would not have been sustained "but for" the property owner's intervention.Remedies
The main remedy against tortious loss is compensation in 'damages' or money. In a limited range of cases, tort law will tolerate self-help, such as reasonable force to expel a trespasser. This is a defence against the tort of battery. Further, in the case of a continuing tort, or even where harm is merely threatened, the courts will sometimes grant an injunction. This means a command, for something other than money by the court, such as restraining the continuance or threat of harm.[20] Usually injunctions will not impose positive obligations on tortfeasors, but some Australian jurisdictions can make an order for specific performance to ensure that the defendant carries out their legal obligations, especially in relation to nuisance matters.[21]Theory and reform
Scholars and lawyers have identified conflicting aims for the law of tort, to some extent reflected in the different types of damages awarded by the courts: compensatory, aggravated and punitive. In The Aims of the Law of Tort (1951)[22], Glanville Williams saw four possible bases on which different torts rested: appeasement, justice, deterrence and compensation.From the late 1950s a group of legally oriented economists and economically oriented lawyers emphasized incentives and deterrence, and identified the aim of tort as being the efficient distribution of risk. They are often described as the law and economics movement. Ronald Coase, one of the movement's principle proponents, submitted, in his article The Problem of Social Cost (1960)[23], that the aim of tort should be to reflect as closely as possible liability where transaction costs should be minimized.
Calls for reform of tort law come from diverse standpoints reflecting diverse theories of the objectives of the law. Some calls for reform stress the difficulties encoutered by potential claimants. Because of all people who have accidents, only some can find solvent defendants from which to recover damages in the courts, P. S. Atiyah has called the situation a "damages lottery".[24] Consequently, in New Zealand, the government in the 1960s established a "no-fault" system of state compensation for accidents. Similar proposals have been the subject of Command Papers in the UK and much academic debate.
However, in the U.S. calls for reform have tended to be for drastic limitation on the scope of tort law, a minimisation process on the lines of economic analysis. Anti-trust damages have come under special scrutiny,[25] and many people believe the availability of punitive damages generally are a strain on the legal system.
Theoretical and policy considerations are central to fixing liability for pure economic loss and of public bodies.
- See also: Tort reform in the United States
Tort and criminal law
There is some overlap between crime and tort, since tort, a private action, used to be used more than criminal laws in centuries gone. For example, in English law an assault is both a crime and a tort (a form of trespass to the person). A tort allows a person, usually the victim, to obtain a remedy that serves their own purposes (for example by the payment of damages to a person injured in a car accident, or the obtaining of injunctive relief to stop a person interfering with their business). Criminal actions on the other hand are pursued not to obtain remedies to assist a person — although often criminal courts do have power to grant such remedies — but to remove their liberty on the state's behalf. That explains why incarceration is usually available as a penalty for serious crimes, but not usually for torts.Many jurisdictions, especially the US, retain punitive elements in tort damages, for example in anti-trust and consumer-related torts, making tort blur the line with actually criminal acts. Also there are situations where, particularly if the defendant ignores the orders of the court, a plaintiff can obtain a punitive remedy against the defendant, including imprisonment. Some torts may have a public element — for example, public nuisance — and sometimes actions in tort will be brought by a public body. Also, while criminal law is primarily punitive, many jurisdictions have developed forms of monetary compensation or restitution which criminal courts can directly order the defendant to pay to the victim. See also Ronen Perry, The Role of Retributive Justice in the Common Law of Torts: A Descriptive Theory, 73 Tenn. L. Rev. 177 (2006).
Tort by legal jurisdiction
Legal jurisdictions whose legal system developed from the English common law have the concept of tortious liability. There are technical differences from one jurisdiction to the next in proving the various torts. For the issue of foreign elements in tort see Tort and Conflict of Laws.Etymology
Middle English, "injury", from Anglo-French, from Medieval Latin tortum, from Latin, neuter of tortus "twisted", from past participle of torquēre.See also
Notes
1. ^ Zweigert, P. & Kötz, H. (1998). An Introduction to Comparative Law, 3rd ed., Oxford: Clarendon Press, pp595-628. ISBN 0198268599.
2. ^ [1932] AC 563, 561
3. ^ [1932] AC 562
4. ^ see Occupier's Liability Act 1956 and 1984
5. ^ [1909] AC 229
6. ^ Jones v Powell (1629) 123 Eng. Rep. 1155
7. ^ Rylands v. Fletcher (1866) LR 1 Exch 265
8. ^ Cambridge Water Co Ltd v Eastern Counties Leather plc [1994] 2 AC 264
9. ^ p.509 Markesinis and Deakin's Tort Law (2003 5th Ed.) OUP)
10. ^ Mogul Steamship Co. Ltd. v. McGregor, Gow & Co. (1889) LR 23 QBD 598
11. ^ per Bowen LJ, (1889) LR 23 QBD 598, 614
12. ^ Taff Vale Railway v. Amalgamated Society of Railway Servants [1901] AC 426
13. ^ Quinn v. Leatham [1901] AC 495
14. ^ Torquay Hotels Ltd v. Cousins [1968]
15. ^ Rookes v. Barnard [1964] AC 1129
16. ^ [1964] AC 465
17. ^ Although this area of law clearly overlaps with contract, misrepresentation is a tort as confirmed by Bridge LJ in Howard Marine and Dredging Co. Ltd. v A Ogden & Sons [1978] QB 574
18. ^ Richard Whish, Competition Law (2003) 5th Ed., Lexis Nexis, Ch. 10
19. ^ [1]
20. ^ Miller v. Jackson [1975]
21. ^ Currie, S., & Cameron, D. (2000), "Your Law", Nelson Thomson Learning, Melbourne, p. 225
22. ^ Williams, G. [1951] "The Aims of the Law of Tort", Current Legal Problems 137
23. ^ Coase, R. H. (1960). "The Problem of Social Cost". The Journal of Law and Economics 3: 1-44. , repreinted in Coase, R. H. (1990). The Firm, the Market and the Law. Chicago: Chicago University Press, pp95-156. ISBN 0-226-11101-6. , online version
24. ^ Atiyah, P. S. (1997) The Damages Lottery
25. ^ see especially, Bork, R. (1971) The Antitrust Paradox
2. ^ [1932] AC 563, 561
3. ^ [1932] AC 562
4. ^ see Occupier's Liability Act 1956 and 1984
5. ^ [1909] AC 229
6. ^ Jones v Powell (1629) 123 Eng. Rep. 1155
7. ^ Rylands v. Fletcher (1866) LR 1 Exch 265
8. ^ Cambridge Water Co Ltd v Eastern Counties Leather plc [1994] 2 AC 264
9. ^ p.509 Markesinis and Deakin's Tort Law (2003 5th Ed.) OUP)
10. ^ Mogul Steamship Co. Ltd. v. McGregor, Gow & Co. (1889) LR 23 QBD 598
11. ^ per Bowen LJ, (1889) LR 23 QBD 598, 614
12. ^ Taff Vale Railway v. Amalgamated Society of Railway Servants [1901] AC 426
13. ^ Quinn v. Leatham [1901] AC 495
14. ^ Torquay Hotels Ltd v. Cousins [1968]
15. ^ Rookes v. Barnard [1964] AC 1129
16. ^ [1964] AC 465
17. ^ Although this area of law clearly overlaps with contract, misrepresentation is a tort as confirmed by Bridge LJ in Howard Marine and Dredging Co. Ltd. v A Ogden & Sons [1978] QB 574
18. ^ Richard Whish, Competition Law (2003) 5th Ed., Lexis Nexis, Ch. 10
19. ^ [1]
20. ^ Miller v. Jackson [1975]
21. ^ Currie, S., & Cameron, D. (2000), "Your Law", Nelson Thomson Learning, Melbourne, p. 225
22. ^ Williams, G. [1951] "The Aims of the Law of Tort", Current Legal Problems 137
23. ^ Coase, R. H. (1960). "The Problem of Social Cost". The Journal of Law and Economics 3: 1-44. , repreinted in Coase, R. H. (1990). The Firm, the Market and the Law. Chicago: Chicago University Press, pp95-156. ISBN 0-226-11101-6. , online version
24. ^ Atiyah, P. S. (1997) The Damages Lottery
25. ^ see especially, Bork, R. (1971) The Antitrust Paradox
Further reading
- Simon Deakin, Angus Johnston and Basil Markesinis, Tort Law (2003) 5th Ed. Oxford University Press, ISBN 0-19-925711-6
- Mark Lunney, Ken Oliphant, Tort Law - Texts, Cases (2003) 2nd Ed. Oxford University Press, ISBN 0-19-926055-9
In common law legal systems, the law is created and/or refined by judges: a decision in the case currently pending depends on decisions in previous cases and affects the law to be applied in future cases.
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Tort law II
Part of the common law series
Negligent torts
Negligence · Negligent hiring
Negligent entrustment · Malpractice
Negligent infliction of emotional distress
Doctrines affecting liability
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Part of the common law series
Negligent torts
Negligence · Negligent hiring
Negligent entrustment · Malpractice
Negligent infliction of emotional distress
Doctrines affecting liability
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Tort law II
Part of the common law series
Negligent torts
Negligence · Negligent hiring
Negligent entrustment · Malpractice
Negligent infliction of emotional distress
Doctrines affecting liability
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Part of the common law series
Negligent torts
Negligence · Negligent hiring
Negligent entrustment · Malpractice
Negligent infliction of emotional distress
Doctrines affecting liability
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Tort law II
Part of the common law series
Negligent torts
Negligence · Negligent hiring
Negligent entrustment · Malpractice
Negligent infliction of emotional distress
Doctrines affecting liability
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Part of the common law series
Negligent torts
Negligence · Negligent hiring
Negligent entrustment · Malpractice
Negligent infliction of emotional distress
Doctrines affecting liability
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Tort law II
Part of the common law series
Negligent torts
Negligence · Negligent hiring
Negligent entrustment · Malpractice
Negligent infliction of emotional distress
Doctrines affecting liability
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Part of the common law series
Negligent torts
Negligence · Negligent hiring
Negligent entrustment · Malpractice
Negligent infliction of emotional distress
Doctrines affecting liability
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Tort law II
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Negligent torts
Negligence · Negligent hiring
Negligent entrustment · Malpractice
Negligent infliction of emotional distress
Doctrines affecting liability
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Part of the common law series
Negligent torts
Negligence · Negligent hiring
Negligent entrustment · Malpractice
Negligent infliction of emotional distress
Doctrines affecting liability
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Tort law II
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Negligent torts
Negligence · Negligent hiring
Negligent entrustment · Malpractice
Negligent infliction of emotional distress
Doctrines affecting liability
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Part of the common law series
Negligent torts
Negligence · Negligent hiring
Negligent entrustment · Malpractice
Negligent infliction of emotional distress
Doctrines affecting liability
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Tort law II
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Negligent torts
Negligence · Negligent hiring
Negligent entrustment · Malpractice
Negligent infliction of emotional distress
Doctrines affecting liability
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Part of the common law series
Negligent torts
Negligence · Negligent hiring
Negligent entrustment · Malpractice
Negligent infliction of emotional distress
Doctrines affecting liability
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Tort law II
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Negligent torts
Negligence · Negligent hiring
Negligent entrustment · Malpractice
Negligent infliction of emotional distress
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Part of the common law series
Negligent torts
Negligence · Negligent hiring
Negligent entrustment · Malpractice
Negligent infliction of emotional distress
Doctrines affecting liability
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Tort law II
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Negligent torts
Negligence · Negligent hiring
Negligent entrustment · Malpractice
Negligent infliction of emotional distress
Doctrines affecting liability
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Part of the common law series
Negligent torts
Negligence · Negligent hiring
Negligent entrustment · Malpractice
Negligent infliction of emotional distress
Doctrines affecting liability
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Tort law II
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Negligent torts
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Negligent entrustment · Malpractice
Negligent infliction of emotional distress
Doctrines affecting liability
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Part of the common law series
Negligent torts
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Tort law II
Part of the common law series
Negligent torts
Negligence · Negligent hiring
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Tort law II
Part of the common law series
Negligent torts
Negligence · Negligent hiring
Negligent entrustment · Malpractice
Negligent infliction of emotional distress
Doctrines affecting liability
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Part of the common law series
Negligent torts
Negligence · Negligent hiring
Negligent entrustment · Malpractice
Negligent infliction of emotional distress
Doctrines affecting liability
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Tort law II
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Negligent torts
Negligence · Negligent hiring
Negligent entrustment · Malpractice
Negligent infliction of emotional distress
Doctrines affecting liability
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Part of the common law series
Negligent torts
Negligence · Negligent hiring
Negligent entrustment · Malpractice
Negligent infliction of emotional distress
Doctrines affecting liability
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Tort law II
Part of the common law series
Negligent torts
Negligence · Negligent hiring
Negligent entrustment · Malpractice
Negligent infliction of emotional distress
Doctrines affecting liability
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Part of the common law series
Negligent torts
Negligence · Negligent hiring
Negligent entrustment · Malpractice
Negligent infliction of emotional distress
Doctrines affecting liability
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Tort law II
Part of the common law series
Negligent torts
Negligence · Negligent hiring
Negligent entrustment · Malpractice
Negligent infliction of emotional distress
Doctrines affecting liability
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Part of the common law series
Negligent torts
Negligence · Negligent hiring
Negligent entrustment · Malpractice
Negligent infliction of emotional distress
Doctrines affecting liability
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Tort law II
Part of the common law series
Negligent torts
Negligence · Negligent hiring
Negligent entrustment · Malpractice
Negligent infliction of emotional distress
Doctrines affecting liability
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Part of the common law series
Negligent torts
Negligence · Negligent hiring
Negligent entrustment · Malpractice
Negligent infliction of emotional distress
Doctrines affecting liability
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Tort law
Part of the common law series
Negligence
Duty of care · Standard of care
Proximate cause · Res ipsa loquitur
Calculus of negligence · Eggshell skull
Negligent emotional distress
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Part of the common law series
Negligence
Duty of care · Standard of care
Proximate cause · Res ipsa loquitur
Calculus of negligence · Eggshell skull
Negligent emotional distress
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Criminal law in English law
Part of the common law series
Classes of crimes
Summary · Indictable
Hybrid offence · Regulatory offences
Lesser included offence
Elements of crimes
Actus reus · Causation
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Part of the common law series
Classes of crimes
Summary · Indictable
Hybrid offence · Regulatory offences
Lesser included offence
Elements of crimes
Actus reus · Causation
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English Tort law
Part of the common law series
Negligence
Duty of care
Standard of care
Bolam Test
Breach of duty
Causation
Breaking the chain
Acts of the claimant
Remoteness
Professional negligence
Loss of chance
Loss of right
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Part of the common law series
Negligence
Duty of care
Standard of care
Bolam Test
Breach of duty
Causation
Breaking the chain
Acts of the claimant
Remoteness
Professional negligence
Loss of chance
Loss of right
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trespass can be:
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- the criminal act of going into somebody else's land or property without permission of the owner or lessee;
- a civil law tort that may be a valid cause of action to seek judicial relief and possibly damages through a lawsuit - see trespass to land.
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Tort law I
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Intentional torts
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Intentional infliction of emotional distress
Property torts
Trespass to chattels
Trespass to land · Conversion
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Intentional torts
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Intentional infliction of emotional distress
Property torts
Trespass to chattels
Trespass to land · Conversion
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Tort law I
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Intentional torts
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Intentional infliction of emotional distress
Property torts
Trespass to chattels
Trespass to land · Conversion
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Part of the common law series
Intentional torts
Assault · Battery
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Intentional infliction of emotional distress
Property torts
Trespass to chattels
Trespass to land · Conversion
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Tort law I
Part of the common law series
Intentional torts
Assault · Battery
False arrest · False imprisonment
Intentional infliction of emotional distress
Property torts
Trespass to chattels
Trespass to land · Conversion
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Part of the common law series
Intentional torts
Assault · Battery
False arrest · False imprisonment
Intentional infliction of emotional distress
Property torts
Trespass to chattels
Trespass to land · Conversion
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Tort law I
Part of the common law series
Intentional torts
Assault · Battery
False arrest · False imprisonment
Intentional infliction of emotional distress
Property torts
Trespass to chattels
Trespass to land · Conversion
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Part of the common law series
Intentional torts
Assault · Battery
False arrest · False imprisonment
Intentional infliction of emotional distress
Property torts
Trespass to chattels
Trespass to land · Conversion
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Tort law I
Part of the common law series
Intentional torts
Assault · Battery
False arrest · False imprisonment
Intentional infliction of emotional distress
Property torts
Trespass to chattels
Trespass to land · Conversion
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Part of the common law series
Intentional torts
Assault · Battery
False arrest · False imprisonment
Intentional infliction of emotional distress
Property torts
Trespass to chattels
Trespass to land · Conversion
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Tort law I
Part of the common law series
Intentional torts
Assault · Battery
False arrest · False imprisonment
Intentional infliction of emotional distress
Property torts
Trespass to chattels
Trespass to land · Conversion
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Part of the common law series
Intentional torts
Assault · Battery
False arrest · False imprisonment
Intentional infliction of emotional distress
Property torts
Trespass to chattels
Trespass to land · Conversion
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Tort law I
Part of the common law series
Intentional torts
Assault · Battery
False arrest · False imprisonment
Intentional infliction of emotional distress
Property torts
Trespass to chattels
Trespass to land · Conversion
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Part of the common law series
Intentional torts
Assault · Battery
False arrest · False imprisonment
Intentional infliction of emotional distress
Property torts
Trespass to chattels
Trespass to land · Conversion
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Tort law I
Part of the common law series
Intentional torts
Assault · Battery
False arrest · False imprisonment
Intentional infliction of emotional distress
Property torts
Trespass to chattels
Trespass to land · Conversion
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Part of the common law series
Intentional torts
Assault · Battery
False arrest · False imprisonment
Intentional infliction of emotional distress
Property torts
Trespass to chattels
Trespass to land · Conversion
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Tort law I
Part of the common law series
Intentional torts
Assault · Battery
False arrest · False imprisonment
Intentional infliction of emotional distress
Property torts
Trespass to chattels
Trespass to land · Conversion
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Part of the common law series
Intentional torts
Assault · Battery
False arrest · False imprisonment
Intentional infliction of emotional distress
Property torts
Trespass to chattels
Trespass to land · Conversion
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